The Michigan Daily-Friday, October 2, 1981-Page 5 1000-0 Bomb blast kills 60; rips apart PLO center 1\ AP P ofO MICHAEL BATES OF DREWSVILLE, N.H., holds up his hands for newsmen to see yesterday at Boston's Massachusetts General Hospital. Bates has seven fingers reattached successfully after a two-day operation at the hospital. He had lost eight, one of which could not be saved. 7 fingers reattached i.n surgical BOSTON (AP) - Seven fingers severed from the hands of a 21-year- old man by an iron press were suc- cessfully reattached in a two-day } "surgical marathon" that involved 44 doctors, nurses and technicians, doctors announced yesterday. Dr. James May Jr., who headed the Massachusetts General Hospital surgical team, said he believed the operation marked the first time surgeons have been able to replace that many fingers. He also said the 461/2 hours was the longest a patient had been under general anesthesia at Massachusetts General. "THE REASON FOR reporting this case is that surgeons in general and the public in general must be made aware that this type of procedure is possible," May tolda news conference that was attended by the patient, Michael Bates of Drewsville, N.H. Bates lost eight fingers Sept. 4 when they were caught in the iron press at a factory in Bellows Falls, Vt. "I knew I didn't have any hands," Bates recalled. "I didn't think I'd have hands again until a fewdays ago when they had me- move my fingers." MAY SAID THE surgical proced- cures for reattaching severed limbs have become commonplace over the past few years. He- estimated surgeons at his hospital perform an average of one replant operation a week. "This type of replant surgery is going on in'every major city as we speak," he said. "We were able to conduct this type of surgical marathon because we have the per- sonnel to carry it out." marathon Bates was first treated at Rockingham Memorial Hospital in Bellows Falls by Dr. Richard San- ctuary, who conferred with May by telephone and decided to send the patient the 120 miles to Boston. DOCTORS WERE ABLE to replant all eight fingers, but May said the little finger on the right hand had to be partially amputated later after it began to lose cir- culation. Bates arrived in Boston by am- bulance 2% hours after his accident. The fingers, which were kept in a saline solution cooled by ice water, were taken to Boston in the same ambulance. May said the fingers were crushed at the base, making surgery more difficult. Surgeons had to shorten each finger about-three-quarters of a inch to eliminate the most serious damage. WHILE BATES WAS being treated in the emergency room, pairs of surgeons, working with microscopes, prepared each finger for reattachment, labeling 16 nerve endings, 24 tendons, and 24 arteries and veins. Surgeons had to graft veins from Bates' arms and feet to sections of the fingers severely mangled by the iron press. Bates was then transferred to the operating . ^om where pairs of surgeons worked on each hand. The surgeons worked in shifts, with May working some 20 hours. May said Bates already has recovered partial movement in the fingers and will have to undergo in- tense physical therapy before doc- tors know how much function he will have in his hands. BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - A car bomb explosion ripped through the ner- ve center of the Palestine Liberation Organization yesterday, killing at least 60 people and wounding about 300, a PLO spokesman said. The PLO said no ranking guerilla was hurt, but another group reported a PLO Central Commit- tee member was killed. Witnesses said the blast set off fires, reduced 60 cars to scorched metal, splintered telephone poles and hurled bodies through the air as the ex- plosives-packed auto blew up in front of the PLO offices on Bustani Street in Moslem West Beirut. Explosives exper- ts estimated 220 pounds of TNT went off. LEBANON'S state-run television said an anonymous caller purporting to represent a right-wing organization claimed his group was responsible for the blast. The group, the Front for the Liberation of Lebanon from Foreigners, has claimed reponsibility for a series of bombings in the past two weeks. A total of 54 people perished in the previous attacks, including 25 people killed Sept. 17 at the PLO's south Lebanon regional headquarters in Sidon. The PLO says the group is an Israeli front, and that "Israel and its agents in Lebanon" set off the latest bomb. IN TEL AVIV, a spokesman for the Israeli Foreign Ministry denied "all responsibility for the recent ex- plosions" and called the charge "one of the PLO's most outrageous lies so far." Prime Minister Shafik Wazzan of U' student acquitted in liquor, sales trial (Continued from Page 1) However, another bartender working that night - Carl Warschauski, a 22- year-old LSA junior - testified that he heard the police officer who made the citation telling Skupin that she did, in fact, have a stamp on her hand. The stamp on her hand, Warschauski testified, was from the Second Chance bar, 516 E. Liberty, and was to prove that she had paid a cover charge, not that she was old enough to drink. The officer told the court that he did not remember whether the conver- sation had taken place. Support the March of Dimes BIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION Lebanon also blamed Israel for the at- tack. "Israel, which has been preven- ted from launching further air attacks on Lebanon, has now resorted to other methods for which it is either directly responsible or by using its agents in Lebanon," he said. He was referring to a U.S.-proposed July 24 cease-fire that stopped two weeks of PLO-Israeli fighting in southern Lebanon. "If this is going to continue, then we consider it a serious violation of the cease-fire agreement," said Shafiq Al Hout, director of the PLO office in Lebanon. "We can't stand a cease-fire on a declared war and face a secret war." 5% Off list prices on all new course books. 25-50% Off list prices on good used copies. Ground Floor, Michigan Union...Open 7 days a week Discount prices on all school supplies, dormitory accessories, classical records, calculators, photographic and art supplies , and toiletries. B~ooms i «Y r nw"Ma SE IORSI"*! 9 C y An~ or Coft I j l r ------- ------ ------ -7 v I r--...--"- Engin. salary hike 'announced by Dec (Continued from Page 1) Competition from jobs in private in- dustry has created an even greater problem, Mechanical Engineering Professor Charles Vest said. "OVER THE LAST few years we have lost some of our very best people Sn the young professor category," Vest said. Mechanical engineering Assistant Professor Panos Papalambros said that corporations come to professors of- fering salaries that are three times higher than the University pays. "In the hot areas like .computer design you hear of salaries in the $50,000 to $70,000 range," Papalambros said. Schools in the southwest are offering teaching and research jobs in the *$30,000 to $35,000 salary range for freshly graduated Ph.Ds, Papalambros added. Professors resist the lure of private industry and choose to stay at the University because of loyal colleagues and the supporti' tual environment, Papalamb People also stay at the because they are devoted t and teaching, Vest said. "If your sole motivation money, then this prograr help," Vest said. Dnnt wait for li1ttle birdie Women's 1 IUClothing in ty to their I s/l ve intellec- Wrg ros said. i*" Brand New Wrangler University1Salesmen o research in life was * Wholesale Prices1 n will not - I - this coupon ~i Sit., Oct3 9-3 1 W I St 324 E Kingsley I near Kerrytown e to tell Don't You Be Left Out The the sword of michigan Call for your senior portrait ap- pointment NOWI at 764-9425 or 764-0561. Portraits will be taken for a limited time only at the Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard (next to the S.A.B.) uon T AT11U111[ ~ ac. you. 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